Hi,I have several Starter Sets now available that I developed for Arduino Workshops and classes I am doing. My scrounging for low-cost parts got out of control and now my Chinese friend Peng and I have put this online store together.

There is an Electronic Brick starter set with 12 different pluggable input and output devices, including various temperature, light, sound and Motion sensors. One version includes an open source copy of an Arduino Duemilanove. Comes with a Sensor Shield V4, cables, and compartmented carrying box. I have found these to be a big advantage in a class situation where you can be sure things are connected right instead of debugging several different breadboards during a class.

I also have several Starter Sets with a selection of Input and Output devices, breadboards, and many components. Some come with an open source copy of Duemilanove or Mega. I also have some selection of electronics components in sets of resistors, capacitors, transistors and diodes.

Online Educational Materials are in development; some are useable; all will be getting better over the next several weeks. See http://yourduino.com

I think you will find the prices very attractive, and we have 2 or 3 shipping options to most areas of the world. Recently added Tahiti and Iceland on customer requests so Arduino works in any climate!

I would really appreciate feedback on what you see here and what you'd like to see in the future. We have access to "Radio Row 2011" in Shenzhen, China where we can get almost anything electronic.

I would like to collaborate with anyone teaching Arduino / Electronics on both online materials and courseware. Open Source - Open Course is the future, and collaboration is key to good ideas and materials.

AFAIK there are no export taxes from China, and in (many) countries small shipments of < $150 or so are not usually taxed. But Customs is unpredictable, and you may have to end up paying duty if they pull you out of the crowd. Where I live in Saudi Arabia, stuff can sit in Customs for 20+ days :0 We try to label stuff "Educational Electronics" FWIW.

So It's really a big World, and I am fortunate to have friends from so many places and cultures and experiences. It's a long story that I have to write.

Peng and I are both concerned about the future of China's villagers, and the jobs they have now and in the future: http://www.terryking.us/photoalbum/v/china/workers/ We are working on ways the Village can become involved in the value-add of the modern world without giving up rural life and moving to Shenzhen. We are talking to Uncle Zhou, who is the "mayor" of Gao Ping about how the economics of the village work today and what the future might bring.

Peng has written one book and most of another, and I have done a lot of discussion and editing with him.

So it is an exhilarating journey, and someday we may both make a living at it. But the Journey, and new things to try, and communicating with people is what matters.

Presumably due to the prices of the kits, the board (in your $65 kit) is not an official Arduino Mega despite the board in the pictures having the labelling 'Arduino Mega'.If it is not an official Arduino board then it cannot have labeling on it implying that it is (the Arduino name is trademarked). If it is not the board pictured, and instead is a derivitive board with 'yourduino' labelling then perhaps the picture should reflect that as it would likely confuse people as it is currently.

Boards like this: http://arduino-direct.com/sunshop/index.php?l=product_detail&p=5 cannot say say 'Arduino Duemilanove' on them either - even if they state that they are an open source copy - as per the Arduino.cc policy page

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What about other uses of the word "Arduino"? ..... you do not include the word "Arduino" (or derivatives thereof) in the name of your product, company, or domain name without permission

There are at least 5 or 6 suppliers of copies of the original boards. I have tried to make sure that any that we sell come with labels that identify them as "Open Source Copy" or "Arduino Compatible".I have no control over the actual PCB artwork before they are relabeled.

I'll try to make VERY clear what is not Original Arduino...

But Ebay is outta control in so many ways... "Arduino Duemilanove" gets 208 results. That's wrong, and I am trying to be clear about that situation while making low-cost stuff available to people who need it. In my workshops I use mostly original UNOs and suggest to people that they at least buy an original Arduino board to support the effort.

There are at least 5 or 6 suppliers of copies of the original boards. I have tried to make sure that any that we sell come with labels that identify them as "Open Source Copy" or "Arduino Compatible".I have no control over the actual PCB artwork before they are relabeled.

I'll try to make VERY clear what is not Original Arduino...

But Ebay is outta control in so many ways... "Arduino Duemilanove" gets 208 results. That's wrong, and I am trying to be clear about that situation while making low-cost stuff available to people who need it. In my workshops I use mostly original UNOs and suggest to people that they at least buy an original Arduino board to support the effort.

Nice to hear that

I personally only purchased one official Arduino but I recommend to others that they buy their first board as an 'official' arduino, not just for supporting the community but also for ensuring that if they have an issue - well all know exactly what the board is like as most of us have at least one of them. Some clone board or variation may have many other issues that people may not have encountered before.

I was under the impression that the pictures of arduinos on the site are simply photoshopped versions of original arduinos. I was going to ask what moscius pointed out as well. The descriptions seem clearer now, but the images still are confusing. I would rather see a picture of the actual board I am buying ...

Anyway I need to pay a bunch of bills tonight, and if I have any money left after that ... theres an order coming your way :-)

The "Open Source Copies" that are "Arduino compatible" are made by companies that are using the released design files from Arduino.cc, and they look very close to the originals. The Megas have a little bit different color board. We've asked for copies without the "Arduino" silkscreen labeling, but no one is making them that we have found. If we get big enough we will have a production run done with different artwork. Meanwhile, the stickers / printing...

A couple of these images came from the suppliers, but I think we shot the 168/328's ourself, by the high image quality.

There are stickers applied to the actual boards denoting them as Open Source Copies. We want to be 100% open on what are copies and what are original Arduinos. Our application as official Arduino distributor is in the works; right now we have to buy from a middleman at almost the retail price.

Go to http://ebay.com and search on "Arduino Duemilanove". You'll get many dozens of Arduino copies with almost no disclaimers. We don't think that's right.

We have legal copies, labeled as copies, and tested by us before shipment. That's the best we can figure to do so far.

We have legal copies, labeled as copies, and tested by us before shipment. That's the best we can figure to do so far.

Yeah that sounds much better than some do.

On minor thing you could do atm is change the title you have as 'Arduino Microcontrollers' to 'Arduino Compatible Microcontrollers'.Then they all fit into the category. The official Arduino board is compatible with Arduino too.

...One minor thing you could do atm is change the title you have as 'Arduino Microcontrollers' to 'Arduino Compatible Microcontrollers'.Then they all fit into the category. The official Arduino board is compatible with Arduino too.[/quote]Good Idea! Did that....

Hi,I have several Starter Sets now available that I developed for Arduino Workshops and classes I am doing. My scrounging for low-cost parts got out of control and now my Chinese friend Peng and I have put this online store together.

Hello, Terry!I think what you and your colleagues are doing for making popular Arduino (YourDuino) and electronics in general among young people, is very important, especially in developing countries like mine, where most people can't afford to buy one Lego Mindstorms NXT, but really want to study and to get educated in electronics and programming. I'm from Russia (but not Russian), we have here mostly 'grown' specialists who can make an Arduino (we have a version here called a Freeduino), but it's only for adults, people who are skilled in electronics already. Speaking about applying Arduino and its clones for educational purposes, I think the idea is just brilliant.Actually, one of my friend advised me to google for Arduino when I'd asked about MIT media lab's PicoPoard ( http://www.picocricket.com/picoboard.html ) of PicoCricket kids set. I planned to use Arduino with Scratch in a learning group... if I ever have a chance to gather such a study group. Still I do everything by myself as a volunteer (now I'n preparing a web site with Scratch video lessons) ... sometimes getting despair (maybe I just waste my time).

I discovered this forum topic and I'm so glad I can learn from people like you Terry.

And here: http://arduino-info.wikispaces.com/BrickStarterSet is the Educational Starter Set we have. Just click on any Electronic Brick for How-To information and examples of hookup and Software Sketches. This is oriented for the easy-to-connect Electronic Bricks, but that's just a connection convenience and breadboarded parts could be used just as well.

I was fortunate to visit the MIT Media Lab several times about 10 to 7 years ago, and meet Seymour Papert, the author of MINDSTORMS and other developers of the LEGO Mindstorms system. I hope to keep working on Educational materials forever!

Thank you so much, Terry, for you help and advises.I will study everything about Arduinos and how it can be used in kids education thoroughly, starting from yourduino.com - the information is represented in a very clear and understandable way for kids (I try to regard it as I was a kid). MIT media lab gave the world wonderful project like Scratch or PicoCricket (development of the last one is suspended now, as it seems, it has come to a logical end actually, besides now there is Lego Mindstorms, but again I don't think Mindstorms is really affordable 'for the rest of the world').

so as you can see, it depends on region : in any way,I would order ready kits from your shop because it saves me lots of money.shipping from China to Russia is quite low if not to use DHL.

The starter kits from yourduino already have very good pricing.IF there were several basics video lessons on how to work with these kits, that would be perfect. You have some great written tutorials http://arduino-info.wikispaces.com/BrickStarterSet But modern kids are lazy to read, unfortunately ;(